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Callum Cant

Callum Cant is a British author, researcher and labour rights advocate known for his contributions regarding workers in the gig economy. He is a lecturer in management at Essex Business School.

Early life and education

Cant was born in Hampshire and privately educated at Lord Wandsworth College, the universities of Warwick and Sussex, and the University of West London, where he completed his PhD. His thesis, titled "'We are a service class': a workers’ inquiry into the class composition of service commodity production during the unreal interregnum", focused on understanding the class composition of young, precarious, disorganised, and low-paid service sector workers in the UK.

Career

Cant was the head of communications at Momentum during the 2019 general election. Upon leaving Momentum, he returned to research and completed a postdoctoral position at the Oxford Internet Institute, University of Oxford, collaborating on the 'Fairwork AI' project with the Global Partnership on Artificial Intelligence.

Cant has contributed over 100 articles to publications such as The Guardian, The Independent and Novara Media. From 2018 to 2019, he penned a column 'Stay Classy' for Vice, focusing on strikes in the UK.

Currently, Cant is a senior lecturer in management at Essex Business School as well as an editor for Notes from Below, for which he hosts a podcast called, Workers' Inquiry.

Research and publications

Cant's research interests include artificial intelligence, platform capitalism, algorithmic management, workers’ inquiry, class composition, trade unions, and industrial relations. His published notable contributions include a book Riding for Deliveroo: Resistance in the New Economy, which investigates class conflict in platform capitalism. In 2024 he published "" alongside James Muldoon and Mark Graham, an investigation into the people exploited by AI. He has also co-authored academic articles such as "Fast Food Shutdown: From disorganisation to action in the service sector" in Capital & Class and "Digital workerism: Technology, Platforms, and the Circulation of Workers’ Struggles" in tripleC: Communication, Capitalism & Critique.

References